ffilja family ®ircU. A HYMN OF TRUST. Leave God to order all thy ways,. And hope in Him whate’er betide ; Thou’lt find him in the evil days- An all-sufiicient Strength and Guide. Who trusts in love, Builds on the rock that nought can move. What can these anxious cares avail, These never ceasing moans and sighs? What can it help us to bewail Each painful moment as it flies ? Onr cross and trials do but press The heavier for our bitterness. Only your restless heart keep still, And wait in cheerful hope, content To take whate’er His gracious will, His all-discerning love has sent; Nor doubt our inmost wants are known To Him who chose us for his own. , He knows when joyful hours are best, He sends them as He sees it meet; When thou hast borne its fiery test, And now art freed from all deceit, He comes to thee all unaware, And makes thee own his loving care. Nor in the heat of pain and strife, Think God hath cast thee off unheard; Nor that the man whose prosperous life Thou enviest, is of him preferred; Time passes, and much change doth bring, And sets a bound to everything. All are alike before his face; ’Tis easy to our God Most High To make the rich man poor and base, To give the poor man wealth and joy, True wonders still of him are wrought, Who setteth up and briggs to naught. Sing, pray, and swerve not from his ways, But do thine own part faithfully; Trust His rich promises of grace, So shall it be fulfilled in thee ; God never yet forsook at need The soul that trusted Him indeed. —From the German. NATHIE’S KNITTING-NEEDLE—A STORY FOR CHILDREN. BY SOPHIE MAY. Mr. Spencer thought his little hoy Nathie was always under his feet; going out or coming in, he was in danger of stepping upon the child. Priscilla, the kitchen girl, thought he was always out of doors, for his little shoes were usually thick with mud, and his frocks and pinafores were nightly candidates for the wash-tub. His mother, oh the other hand, de dared that he spent his time chiefly in the house; for nothing went on from parlor to kitchen, from attic to cellar, without his knowledge and consent. There was not a pie—par ticularly a mince-pie—into which he did not try to have a finger. He was seldom quiet for two min utes in succession; but perhaps his little brain moved as fast as his feet, for he often exclaimed, “O, mamma, I’ve been a-thinking!” Then followed a torrent of droll questions: “Who made the spiders? Why ?’’ " Which did God love best, ugly spiders, or sweet little cunning caterpillars ? Why ?” " Were angels spirits ? Then how did they get into the bottle?” (Spirits of turpentine.) “What made folks say Holy Bible? 0, yes, iie knew what holy meant, of course he did—it meant the whole of it—the whole of the Bible. Then wasn’t the big dictionary the Wholly Dictionary ? Why not ?” Nathie’s babyhood had been very delicate; and for this reason his pa rents rejoiced greatly over his present 'fine health and sprightliness. They gladly suffered the consequences of all his innocent mischief, and allowed him to bake sand pies, explore potato hills, and tear his frocks into ribbons. When he was at his wits’ end for something to do, he would rush into the house, and sigh out, “ 0 what shall I do to make me happy ?” Such an appeal was irresistible. His indulgent mother was sure to leave her mending or pickling, and proceed at once to the business of making her little boy happy. One day—and now we come to our story, which is a true one—he was much attracted by four bright knit ting-kneedles dancing in his mother’s fingers. “Couldn’t he have one of those long, shiny things his own self? Not to play with, but to keep for always?” Perhaps there was floating in his mind some bright vision of a very pe culiar fish-hook, which he meant to make for the purpose of prying little frogs out of the brook. Or it may be he intended to use the knitting-needle as a kind of pick-axe, with which to dig Ms way through to China. At any rate, he was eager for a “stocking-needle,” and his mother found an old one and gave it to him, with the caution not to put out Ms eyes with it, and by no means to stick it into his ears. Nathie promised care, received Ms present with a shout, and was perfectly happy for at least five minutes. Presently his father proposed to take him out for a walk, and Nathie started off in high spirits. “Is that knitting-needle in your pocket ?” said his careful mamma. " My little boy must not take it out of the house.” Nathie protested; that “It wasn’t in Ms pocket, it wasn’t anywhere, it was all gone.” Mrs. Spencer wondered how the little one could bear such a serious loss so cheerfully,-but supposed he was consoled by the prospect of a walk, for he had a great partiality for “ breathing the fleshly air,” —meaning fresh air. When Nat hie returned, he had wonders to relate. “He and Papa Jiad been to the jail-house, where they THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER "1, 1865. locked folks up; saw mens in there, saw womens, heard somebody sing, saw a man make shoes.” His mother interrupted him at full tide: “ Where had he found his knit ting-needle?” For he held it firmly clutched in bis chubby fingers. “Didn’t find it,” replied the child; “ it’s all in the ground.” “ Why, no, dear, you are holding it in your hand.” "0, no, mamma,” said Nathie, hesi tating; “if you could look in the ground, you’d see my needle. This isn’t that one.” “Why, Nathie!” replied his mo ther, quite shocked; “how can you tell me such a wrong, wrong story?” “I.didn’t, mamma.” "Yes, you carried this needle off in your pocket, just as I told you not to do, and so you disobeyed me. You said it was all gone, Nathie, and it wasn’t, and that was one wrong story; and now you say this is not the needle I gave you, so that makes two wrong stories. 0, Nathie, Nathie!” The child has never before attempt ed to deceive. ‘ 0, mamma,” said he, winking very fast, “I never! I never! I tell you, mamma, I never! The needle’s in the ground.” “Well, then, where did you find this one ?” “ I don’t' know. I didn’t find it. Woman gave it to me.” "A woman? Where?” “Down to jail-house, I guess,” re plied Nathan, apparently making up a third story, with which to cover the other two. Mr. Spencer now left the room, thinking the child might “come to himself” sooner if left alone with his mother. “ Nathie, come sit in my lap. Now don’t be afraid, but tell mother the whole truth. God is looking right at you, my son, the good God who loves little children. If you tell a black lie, 0, how displeased he will be.” “I never,” persisted the child, fix ing his brown eyes on the carpet. “Woman down to jail-house gave me stocking-needle, now she did.” For nearly an hour the mother rea soned and pleaded with the little piece of obstinacy, who still declared, with not a whit the less vehemence, “Wo man down to jail-house gave it to me, now she did.” All the while the father, heavy hearted, was walking the floor of Ms study. “ What shall I do ?” said the poor mother, entering the room pale with anxiety, and gazing wistfully into her husband’s face. “If you will tell me what course to pursue next, I will be thankful. I have appealed to his con science, Ms affections, and his fears, but the boy stahds Ms ground like a rock.” “It is not likely I shall succeed where his-mother fails,” said Mr. Spencer; “but I will make the effort.” He did,. and with no better result. For a boy who had never told a false hood before, Nathie was wonderfully persistent. The truth seemed to be locked up in that tender little breast as in an iron safe. If there was really a key which could open the lock, that key had not yet been found. Mr. Spencer, who was a lawyer of remarkable judgment and knowledge of human nature, racked his shrewd b'rain to imagine what motive the child could have for persisting in his absurd story. It must be because he is too proud to recant. ■ fobbing, ’ panting for breath, and painfully excited, the little boy still poured with tears the same eager words of denial. “No; he never did put the needle in his pocket; it was all gone in the ground,” etc. It was thought best to drop the matter for the present, and to allow Nathie to recover Ms composure. “ Elizabeth;” said Mr. Spencer sud denly, as the wretched child was led down stairs by Priscilla, “do you know it is barely possible that the boy may be telling the truth?” Mrs. Spencer shook her head in credulously. “It was so very impro bable that any woman should have given him a knitting-needle; one, too, of precisely the same size as the first one.” “It is indeed improbable, replied her husband, “but in court, if but a faint doubt is raised, we give the criminal the benefit of that doubt. I believe we will treat our little boy as generously as we treat prisoners at the bar. I will go down to the jail and inquire into the matter; that is easily done.” What was Mrs. Spencer’s surprise,, upon her husband’s return, to hear him say, with much emotion, "Well it is even so! Mrs. Jenkins, the jailor’s mother, says she did give Na thie a knitting-needle! It was prob ably while I was talking with Mr. Baker about the drain.” “How thankful I am!” cried Mrs. Spencer, with a joy she had no words to express. “ And I can assure you that I am too. I only wish I had gone there in season to spare all this distress. Mrs. Jenkins says the little fellow told such a pitiful story about losing a needle, that she gave him a stray one, and that was the last she thought about it. Indeed, by to-morrow she might have been unable to recall the circumstance at all; for her. memory, you know, is failing her. 11 “Why didn’t I give Nathie the be nefit ol the doubt in the first place ?” exclaimed Mrs. Spencer. “I must go now and dry his tears. Poor little martyr!’’— Congregationalist. WONDERS IN FAMILIAR THINGS. “ How clever you are, uncle!” said Harry, gravely. “You know every thing, almost; don’t you ?” "No indeed, Harry,’ exclaimed Mr. Forrester, laughing. “Ifyou knew as much as I do, and a little more, you would be surprised to find that you really knew hardly anything at all.” “Should I?” asked Harry, incred ulously. "Yes, we are surrounded with won ders which' we cannot explain or understand. The commonest every day matters are far beyond our com prehension. We wfll take something very simple; something which I dare say you have fancied you understood yourself. Come here. Now, how did you come?” "I walked,” said Harry, laughing. “What walked?” asked his uncle. “My legs and my feet; they carried' me.” “How did they know that you wanted to be carried here ?” “I told them?” “ How did you tell them?” Harry stared at Mr. Forrester, then at his feet, and looked puzzled. “You did not speak to them, and they have no ears to hear you if you did. Now bend your little finger. How did you do that?” “Oh, do tell me how it is, uncle! I don’t know a bit.” “The wisest man in England can not tell you, my boy,” replied Ms uncle. “We have good reason to be lieve that the part of you wMch thinks, your mind, and your will, are in your head, and that you send mes sages from your head to your legs, if you want to waik or sit down; to your lands, if ydu wish to take hold of something; to your tongue if you wish to speak; but how the message is sent, no one knows. It is believed to be done by a sort of telegraph, lightning being the messenger; and some doctors think they have found out the tele graph .wires—nerves which extend from the head all over the body; but how the lightning is sent, how it finds its way, and how it gives orders and makes them understood, will probably never be discovered in tMs world.” “Shall we know it all in heaven?” asked Harry. “ Perhaps we may,” replied Mr. For rester. "I think we shall know a great deal there wMch is quite beyond our powers of comprehension on earth. -But we are not told in the 'Bible Wh&t Weshall do in fjeaven, cept loving and pr aising God- for goodness to us.” Harry stood for some time in silence bending his little finger now and then, and winking his eyes and looking very solemn. “Uncle,” said he at length, “when I bend my finger, I know it before; I mean, uncle, that I make it bend on purpose ; but when I wink my eyes, I do not know it before, unless I try to think about it. Do my eyes wink of themselves ?” “They do, my boy. Your eyelids wink "to spread a little moisture over your eyes, that they may not get too dry. How troublesome it would be to you, if you had to remember to wink every time you needed it, or if you had to learn how to do it! A poor baby would become blind before it could learn to wink.” “Yes, I know babies can wink,” said Harry. "My baby sister winked famously when she was only a week old. Is there anything else we can do without thinking, uncle?” “Indeed there is, Harry. In that small body of yours, a great deal goes on, of which you tMnk little and know less. If God had only made you and done no more, you must have died directly. The wisest man could not hive told you how to make your heart beat, or how to breathe, or how to grow into a man.” . “How wonderful!” exclaimed Har ry. “ And every dog and cat, I sup pose, and mouse, and fly can breathe, and move its heart, and wink without any trouble!” “Flies cannot wink,” said Mr. For rester, smiling. “They have no, eye lids; but they are nevertheless as wonderfully made as we are. You shall look through my microscope some day, and you will see that there is nothing too small to-be beautifully and perfectly formed, and suited to its place in the world. Some of the most exquisite little animals I ever saw, are ■ smaller than a grain of fine dust.” “How could you see them, uncle?” said Harry. “ I saw a little round glass, smaller than a sixpence, with a morsel of dust on a tiny spot in the middle; and, when it was put under the microscope, I could see a number of forms, —some like exquisite little silver breakfast plates, some sauce-boats with a spout but no handle, and many others wMch I do not now remember. The most exquisite patterns were engraved upon them all.” “Oh, when may I see them ?” asked Harry eagerly. “When the long winter nights come, we will think about it,” replied his uncle. To ejaculate “God help the poor,” is one of the cheapest of charities. THE OLD OAKEN CRADLE. Sweet scenes of my boyhood! I love to recall them, Electric they shimmer on mem’ry’s warm sky,— The maple-fringed river, the hills grand and solemn, And all the dear haunts in the forest near by; I deem these fresh views on the Past’s pano rama As sweetest of all the enchantments of earth, — The ancient red house, in which Life’s devious drama Commenced in the cradle which stood by the hearth; The old oaken cradle, the rocker-worn cradle, The high-posted cradle which stood by the hearth. Near two generations from earth have departed Since home in high state this quaint cradle was brought, Attesting the advent of one who, light-hearted, Gave joy pure and holy, of sad sorrow nought! Dear relic of dream-days I what rest have you • granted To mother and infant, when hushed was his mirth; — How grateful was sleep when the babe for it panted; A boon is the cradle which stands by the hearth! The old oaken cradle, the rocker-worn cradle, The high-posted cradle which stands by the hearth. Not all mem’ry’s promptings of by-gones that gather. Are free from a sadness made sacred by space,— Since angels led two from our home, —and for ever Seraphic beheld they Immanuel’s face ; And we who remain, from those scene are all distant, But never forget we the place of our birth -. The light of our mem’ry, in realms reminis cent, Reveals the staid cradle which stood by the hearth; The old oaken cradle, the rocker-worn cradle, The high-posted cradle which stood by the hearth! —Edward P. Nowell. GIRLS, HELP YOUR MOTHER. "Georgia, come and make some yeast,’’ said Mrs. Gray to her daughter. It was Saturday morning/ and there was a great deal to be done; for Mrs. Gray’s family was large, and she kept mo servant., Georgia made the yeast, and then left the kitchen and went to her chamber to read in a new novel which had been sent to her. " Georgia! Georgia!” said her busy mother, several times; but there was po Georgia to be found. She then tried Jane. “Here, Jane, come and see to the fire; my hands are in the' dough. I wish you wouldn’t, all get off out of sight and hearing when there is so much to do. What is Agnes about ?” “Finishing the boot-mark,” was the reply. “Go and tell her to put that right away, and sweep the parlor and set it to rights,. Find. GroAgift, -anGrtell MCIT tor Bo' up the chamber-work;' and do: jyou.stay.here to help me.” ' “Yes, mother,” was the obedient reply. The girls all obeyed their mother’s orders. They never thought .of doing otherwise; but they never thought of doing anytMng without orders. The whole care of everything rested on their mother now, when she was fifty years of age, feeble and weary, and the mother of three healthy, full grown daughters, as it did when she was in her prime, with a band of little ones around her. Perhaps the first fault had been her own; perhaps she had not rightly trained her girls; but they were old enough now to amend their mother’s mistake. They knew very well how miserable her health was; but they did not seem to realize, as everybody else did, that unless she could be quite relieved from care and labor, her life would soon-be over. Every day she groaned with weari ness, and at night and in the morning her limbs were so stiff that she-eould hardly bend them. "Mother, why in the world don’t you make the girls do more ?” .asked her husbaqd. almost every day of his life; and as often Mrs. Gray replied, "O, they do a great deal, they- are always willing to do all I ask them. They are a great help to me.” Just like a mother! She can always be woefully imposed upon. She’ll shield her cMldren to the last. The Gray, girls were always willing to do what their mother bade; but they were not always ready. “Come, Jennie, it is almost six o’clock,” Mrs. Gray would say. “Yes, in a minute.” In ten, fifteen, or twenty minutes, Mrs. Gray would speak again. “Yes, mother, I am just going.” But it would sometimes be nearly dark before there would be any actual move, and the father and brothers would be home from their day’s work, hungry and of course cross, when they saw that the supper was beMnd hand. Poor Mrs. Gray was so tired of perpetually repeating directions, and of the effort of causing them to be seasonably and properly carried out, that she often did the work her self, when she felt hardly able to crawl, rather than try to get the girls to do ft. 0, how thoughtless and un feeling those daughters were! They quietly allowed the mother to do all that’ she would; but they were re warded. They loved their mother, and they were not really very cruel or wicked girls. Could they have had one glance a few months forward, how utterly changed would have been their conduct! But no one of us can see for a moment before us. "Suddenly the devoted mother.was missing from her .post in the kitchen. She was to he waiter and drudge no more. She died; but had she been cared for and cherished as she should have been, she might have been the companion and comforter of her hus band and her children for many happy years! When they saw the tired feet at rest, the worn, hands folded, the dim eyes closed at last, self-reproach took hold on them, and they wept. They felt that they might have kept her. 'They remembered all their lazy, careless ways, and how worn-out with care and toil they had allowed their mother to become. Every groan they had heard her utter came back to them, and they were filled with re morse for all they had failed to do. The weeks and months only showed them more and more plainly what they had lost and how guilty they had been. But it was too late to make atonement. All they could do was to lay the lesson to'heart and try to im prove by it. This they all did, and they cherished the memory of their dead mother as they had never cher ished her. If any girls who are-walking in the ways of the Gray girls will but take warning by their punishment, they may perhaps escape a, similar, one. There are few agonies more hard to bear than to look on a dead face, more near and dear, and feel that our treat ment has hastened the parting hour. God save ns all from that !—Springfield Republican. THE NEW WIFE. Mr. was a professor of reli gion, and was considered quite a good man. He had the misfortune to lose his wife, who was also pious. Having a large family Of children, he found it necessary to marry a second wife. He chose one that had moved in high life, but nearly all of whose relatives re jected the doctrines of evangelical reli gion. Mr. .did not mean to be irreli gious, but he thought too much religion would not please his wife or her friends, and for this reason he, ne glected family worship and other Christian duties. One night, a short time after their marriage, when he and his wife had retired to rest, she said to him: " Mr. , I thought, when I mar ried you, I was marrying a Christian.” “ Why, my dear wife, ‘ do you doubt my being a Christian?” “Yes, sir, I do.” “What reason have I given you to think so'?” “ Because, sir, a Christian prays with his family, and you do noff” His reply was, " I thought that the reading of t.TießiKle and prayer would be unpleaaaat«i%niit t3ggoma.Ja.Qne that j had been reared under such ah""inrtU'= J ence and moved in such, a circle as you have.” “ Sir, you have nothing to do with all that. Your business is to do your duty as a Christian. It is true I have moved in such a circle as you have described; but I have been influenced by a different one. I do, believe in. re ligion, and I do love to see professors faithful and consistent.” Her husband said to her, “ As it is your wish, I will erect a family altar to-morrow morning.” "Will you wait until morning ? We may both of us be in hell before that time.” “ Why, my dear wife, are you will ing to rise to read the Bible and pray ?” " Certainly I am.” Accordingly they arose and dressed, the husband read a portion of God’s word, and knelt in prayer; and when ,he had prayed, bis wife was ready to pray. The minister was afterwards inquiring of this brother how he got along with the family altar. His reply was, “By the grace of God, it has never gone»down since my wife and I erected it that night.” * WHAT WILL YOU HATE? After a day’s work of calculation and copying, I was under the necessity of waiting an hour in the tap-room of a tavern, to secure the services of a mail-guard, who was to carry a parcel for my employers. Amid the smoke, the spitting, and the clatter of a erowd of inn-haunters, I could not but find some subject for reflection. The presiding genius of the bar was a bloated, whiskered young man, whom I had long known as the aban doned son of a deceased friend. I sighed and was silent. Ever and anon, as one after another,' or squads of two or three approached his shrine to receive and empty his glasses, and deposit their sixpences, I heard the short, peremptory formula of the bacchanal minister, “ W hat will you have ?” “ Brandy ? gin ? punch ? What will you have ?” And the vic tims severally made their bids, as the case might be. The constant repeti tion of the “form in that case made and provided,” set me upon a drowsy meditation on the question, “ What will you have?” “Methinks I can answer the question,” said I to myself as I cast a glance around the murkv' apartment. And first to the young shoemaker, who with a pair of newly finished hoofs is asking for “grog.” What will you have? Young mhn, ® OOll have an empty pocket? 1 here is a trembling/ragged man, with livid spots under the eyes He is a machinist, and has lodgings in the house. What will you have? Ah! the barkeeper knows without an an swer ; he takes gin and water. Poor man! I know also what you will have. Already you have been twice at death’s door; and the gin will not drive off that chill. You will have typhus fever and death. The glasses are washed out and cleaned in the slop-tub under the bar shelf. Now a fresh bevy comes up, cigar in hand. “Gentlemen, what will you have?” I supply the answer for myself. The baker there will have an apoplexy or a sudden fall in his shop. That tailor with green glasses will have consumption; and I fear the three idlers in their train will have the next epidemic that shall sweep off our refuse drunkards. Sorry, indeed, am I to see in this place Mr. Scanting, the cooper. Not to speak of himself, I have reason to believe that both of his grown sons are beginning to drink. He looks about him suspiciously. Now he plucks up courage. He takes whisky. You will have a pair of drunken sons. That young fellow in the green frock coat and colored neckcloth is a musician, a man of reading, and the husband of a lovely English woman. He take§ his glass with the air of a Greek drinking hemlock. You will have a heart broken wife. What! is that lad of fifteen going to the bar ? He is, and he tosses off his cogniac with an air. You will have an early death. The old man that has tottered out of the door has doubtless come hither to drown his grief. His last son has died from the effects of a brawl‘in a theatre. Wretched old man! Yon will have the halter of a suicide. I must take the rest in mass, for it is Saturday night, and the throng in creases. The barkeeper has an assist ant in the person of a pale, sorrowful girl. Two voices now reiterate the challenge, “What will you have?” Misguided friends! lam greatly afraid you will have a death-bed without hope. " ’ ■ ■ ' My man has arrived. As I walked home across the common, I thought thus: “And what will you have, who, day after day and year after year, dealt out the devil’s bounty to his recruits, and received his six pences, as it were, over the coffins of his victims ? You, hardened tempter! (if memory live hereafter,) will have the recollection of your triumphs and the vision of their eternal results s You will have a terrible judgment, and an eternity of such retribution as befits your life.”— Rev. J. W. Alex ander, DJ). THE AMERICAN WOMEN. The June number of Sours at Home has an article on “How to Treat our -Wives,” which those who think that love IS' LitTC 1 —— - true marriage will do well to read. The article is too long for insertion in our paper. The following are the closing paragraphs: The American woman is what the American man requires her to be, and what. the American institutions and influences enable ’her to be. There is constant and fruitful effort on the part of men to secure for their daughters, and for general female society, the best advantages for education and culture; and these same men do this with wives in their homes who are treated little better than housekeepers. They are not regarded as partners; they are not treated as intimate and confidential companions. Equality of position, identity of interest, commu nity of sins, affectionate and consider ate tenderness- and respectfulness of demeanor, thorough sympathy that shows itself in all private and family intercourse, certainly do not prevail between American husbands and wives, when regarded in the aggregate.. Some will be disposed to deny this who only see life under some of its more favored phases; but those who are acquainted with all classes, in. the city and country, cannot fail to recognize the truthfulness of the statement. Women are denied the sympathy and society of their husbands to a shame ful extent. They are kept in a posi tion of dependence, and made to feel their dependence; they are made to ask for money for their personal use, and compelled to feel like mendicants in doing it. There are multitudes of wives, supposed to be well married, who never approach their husbands for money without a sense of humili ation. Now any man who compels the woman of his love to do this, insults her womanhood, degrades her denies essentially his marriage vows and does his best to kill out her respect for him, and to make the con nubial bond an irksome one. A wife who is made to feel that she is a beg gar, is no longer a wife, except in name. A wife who is compelled to feel that. she has no rights except those which her husband accords to her from hour to hour, loses her re spect, and becomes a menial in feeling and in fact. ° Old Age. —Old age is a public good. Do not feel sad because you are old. Whenever you are walking, no one ever opens a gate for you to pass through, no one ever honors you with any kind of help, without being himself the better for what he does; for feHow feeling with the age ripens the soul. ' r Good manners are a part of good morals, and ft is as much your duty as you? interest to practice in both